CHAPTER XIV - Limehouse Hole

The riverside district north of Millwall was, until recently,
known as Limehouse Hole. The name was in use by
the seventeenth century and seems originally to have
designated a part of the river itself. (fn. 1) It reflects the area's
historically greater links with Limehouse than with either
Poplar or the Isle of Dogs. Limehouse Hole can be taken
to stretch southwards from the parish boundary to the
South West India Dock (Impounding) entrance lock and
inland to include Garford Street (Plate 42a; fig. 141).
This was one of the first parts of the parish of Poplar to
be developed, but almost nothing survives of the early
fabric, and the dominating feature in the area is now
Westferry Circus (Plate 152). As London's riverside
was developed, and Limehouse spread eastwards in the
seventeenth century, Limehouse Hole was built up with
shipping-related enterprises. These characterized the area
into the twentieth century. There were shipbuilders,
barge-builders, boat-builders, ropemakers, sailmakers,
mastmakers, blockmakers and ship-chandlers, as well as
general wharfingers. Away from the river there were other
industrial premises, and some houses, most notably on
the early nineteenth-century Rosher estate.

The Riverside Area

The Margetts's Ropeyard Site

The eight acres of riverside land immediately south of
the boundary between Limehouse and Poplar, empty save
perhaps for a few small houses behind the river wall,
were leased by Sir Edward and Sir John Yate to John
Graves in 1633. Graves was a shipbuilder at the yard on
the north side of the boundary, later known as Limekiln
Dockyard and then as Dundee Wharf. (fn. 2) The northern
part of this property was sublet to George Margetts and,
c1650, developed as a ropemaking yard with a wharf,
ropehouse, storehouse, houses and a ropewalk. (fn. 3) In 1664
Samuel Pepys visited Margetts's ropeyard and apparently
decided to use it to supply the Navy. (fn. 4) The royal dockyards
at Woolwich, Chatham and Portsmouth had their own
roperies, but that at Deptford did not, and the Margettses
were its principal suppliers of cordage in the late seventeenth century. (fn. 5)

In 1662 Margetts acquired the freehold of Graves's
eight acres, with an additional 2½ acres to the east. (fn. 6) The
estate subsequently passed by marriage to Cornelius
Purnell, a Portsmouth shipwright. His son sold part of
it in 1717 to Philip Willshire, who acquired the remainder
in 1723. (fn. 7) The estate passed through Willshire's family to
Edward Emmett, whose heirs retained the property until
1809, when it was sold off in parcels. (fn. 8)

The number of buildings on this land gradually
increased. In 1664 the Poplar Commissioners of Sewers
built a storehouse south of Margetts's ropehouse, which
housed the tools used by the 'marsh-men' to maintain
the river wall and foreshore. Another storehouse for the
same purpose was built nearby c1696. (fn. 9) By 1694, when
several leases were granted, there were more buildings.
John Burford took a three-storey warehouse to store fruit
for cider-making and built two more warehouses. Other
buildings, including the first Marsh Storehouse, and a
section of wharf with a crane, were let to Joseph Dent,
a shipwright, who in turn assigned his property to Edward
Terrett, a joiner, in 1703. (fn. 10) Terrett built a shop and loft
for Michael Upston, a blockmaker, in 1705. (fn. 11) By the
early eighteenth century the area had become the site of
a dense and irregularly grouped complex of houses,
warehouses and workshops. (fn. 12) From c1730 to the late
1760s the Hudson's Bay Company held one of the
warehouses, which may have accommodated ships' stores
or exports, rather than imported furs. (fn. 13)

The ropeyard, which was worked by various lessees
from the 1720s, (fn. 14) was taken by William Moffatt c1775,
and was held by his partner James Mitchell from 1778
to 1817. Sailmaking became a part of the business, and
houses on the north-east side of what later became
Emmett Street were converted into a three-storey sail
warehouse. (fn. 15) In 1799 Mitchell obtained a patent for an
influential method of rope manufacture which involved
greater subdivision of cables than had earlier processes,
to reduce strain on the fibres. (fn. 16) In 1809 his premises
comprised a pantile-covered ropewalk, about 1,000ft long
and flanked by spinning grounds, with a yarn house,
tarring houses (rope was tarred to protect it from the
effects of sea-water), a rigging house, warehouses and
timber-built dwelling houses. The northern section of
wharf, adjoining Limekiln Dockyard, had become a bargebuilder's premises. The site south of the ropeyard buildings and north of the passage to Limehouse Hole Stairs
(Thames Place) was a boat-builder's shed and yard, later
used for mastmaking. (fn. 17)

The ropeyard was held by John Robertson from the
1820s to the 1860s, when William Henry Briant converted
it to the manufacture of wire. It ceased working in the
1880s. (fn. 18) The site between the ropeyard and Thames Place
was redeveloped as Pier Wharf in 1875–6, by Tomkins,
Courage & Cracknell, malt factors. Their three-storey
granary warehouse was extended in 1881–2 and 1888. (fn. 19)
The main ropeyard site and the adjacent barge-builder's
wharf were redeveloped with one- and two-storey brick
sheds in 1899–1901 as the southern part of the Dundee,
Perth & London Shipping Company's Dundee Wharf,
most of which was on the Limekiln Dockyard site. The
company expanded on to Pier Wharf in 1905, building a
two-storey warehouse with cruciform-section iron
columns on the ground floor. These parts of Dundee
Wharf were let to the London Trading Company in
1910, for the relocation from Wapping of its River Plate
Wharf, and from 1916 to 1929 were used for wrapping
and packing Oxo cubes. The site was then taken back
into Dundee Wharf. (fn. 20) All the buildings on the north side
of Thames Place were cleared in 1950–1 for a rebuilding
of Dundee Wharf. The river wall north of Limehouse
Hole Stairs was then pushed out to align with the rest
of the wharf. (fn. 21) Dundee Wharf was cleared in 1990 for
the Limehouse Link road.

Figure 141:

Limehouse Hole area. Based on the Ordnance Survey of 1893–5

The sail warehouse on the east side of Emmett Street
was used by E. Speeding & Company, sail- and flagmakers, and Alfred Masson, a corn merchant, before
being removed in 1946–7 to make way for an electricity
sub-station. The west end of the covered ropewalk was
incorporated into a contractor's yard until clearance in
1955–6. (fn. 22)

Limehouse Hole Stairs and Limehouse Pier

Limehouse Hole was a plying place for watermen from
the seventeenth century. There were two sets of river
stairs in 1687, but only those at the end of the passage
that became Thames Place survived. They are prominent
in John Hood's painting of Limehouse Reach in 1768
(Plate 146b). (fn. 23) In 1843 watermen attempted to recover
business lost to steamboats by erecting a floating pier at
Limehouse Hole Stairs. This had evidently gone by
1860, when the Thames Conservancy erected new stairs
projecting on to the foreshore. (fn. 24) Representations calling
for a passenger steamboat service to the locality persuaded
the Conservancy Board to erect a floating pier at Limehouse Hole Stairs in 1870. The pier, a walkway on three
pontoons, was designed by Stephen William Leach, the
Board's engineer. (fn. 25) It was removed in 1901 for the
building of Dundee Wharf. In 1905–6 the LCC constructed a pier, consisting of two lengths of lattice-girder
walkway to a pontoon, as one of several river piers erected
for the 'Penny Steamer' service. (fn. 26) It was removed by the
PLA in 1948, but the stairs and Thames Place, though
closed off in 1967, survived until 1990. (fn. 27)

The Staples's Distillery — Buchanan's Wharf Site

The riverside below Limehouse Hole Stairs was
developed c1692 when Richard Staples and William
Holland built a substantial malt distillery which was
enlarged c1715. North of the distillery there were at least
four houses, built after the land was let to Doyla Catterton, a colourmaker, in 1695. (fn. 28) Near the stairs there
was a public house, perhaps known as the White Lion
in the late seventeenth century, later the Chequers, and
then the Horns and Chequers. (fn. 29) The Royal Oak public
house stood to the east of the distillery on the road that
became Emmett Street. From c1735 Ricklas Booth &
Company had the distillery, ten years later it passed to
Sherman Godfrey & Company and from c1767 to c1790
it was held by Isaac Lefevre and Thomas Ayre. Hood's
painting of 1768 shows the Chequers and a long barnlike building beyond, perhaps the maltings (Plate 146b). (fn. 30)

Lefevre and Ayre probably rebuilt the distillery c1775–6,
when they took a new lease. Their main building was
a large three-storey brick block, in two divisions with
timber internal construction. (fn. 31) The 'maltings' was
replaced by three-storey brick warehouses, one of which
was 215ft by 21ft. The warehouses were let to Joseph
Bramah c1799 and used for hay-pressing, presumably
with Bramah's hydraulic machinery. At approximately
the same date the distillery was taken by Thomas Bowman
and John Garford, oil and seed merchants, who were
tenants of the northernmost windmill on Millwall.
Garford later gained sole control of the premises, which
became a seed-crushing mill and oilcake and seed-cake
warehouse, and he acquired the former hay-pressing
buildings in 1835. (fn. 32)

John Garford (c1772–1850) was a prominent figure in
Poplar, active in the formation of the parish and the
building of All Saints' Church. The road that ran from
his wharf to the Commercial (West India Dock) Road
still carries his name (see below). Until 1877 his family
produced oilcake at what became Garford Wharf, with
A. E. Burrell & Son using the eastern part of the premises
as a paint factory from 1874. (fn. 33) The main buildings were
sold to William Taylor & Company for use as a paint
factory called Taylor's Wharf, (fn. 34) and the long warehouse
(215ft by 21ft) was used by R. J. Hanbury for storing
rice, wheat, tapioca and hops, and was known as Limehouse Wharf (Plate 42b). These wharves were combined
as Venesta Wharf from 1900 to 1921 under the occupation
of the Venesta Company, packing-case makers. (fn. 35) The
Royal Oak public house was rebuilt in 1878 and No. 12
Emmett Street, just north of the long warehouse, was
the United Brothers' beerhouse from the late nineteenth
century until 1935. (fn. 36)

P. R. Buchanan & Company, tea merchants, acquired
Venesta Wharf in 1921, to replace a wharf at Wapping. (fn. 37)
The eighteenth-century warehouses were extended
towards Thames Place in 1924 and 1928–9 with fourand six-storey blocks, and the Horns and Chequers was
demolished. (fn. 38) The old warehouses and the Royal Oak
were replaced in 1935–7 with six-storey brick warehouses
designed by Charles Dunch & Son, architects and wharf
specialists. (fn. 39) Buchanan's Wharf was severely damaged in
the Blitz. (fn. 40) The south-east corner block survived, but the
other buildings on the rectangular site were reinstated in
1950–2 as a six-storey warehouse, with A. J. Thomas and
G. Hartley Goldsmith as architects. The building was
brick with reinforced-concrete internal construction,
rather than the timber and iron used in the 1935–7
buildings. It was similar in appearance to those lost; plain
and bulky, with a touch of Classicism (Plate 42a). Towards
the river there were full-height pilaster strips beneath a
continuous cornice. The eight divisions provided more
than 1,250,000 cu.ft of storage for tea and rubber. (fn. 41)
Buchanan's Wharf was cleared in 1990 to make way for
the Limehouse Link road.

The Aberdeen Wharf Site

Gray's and Heydon's Dockyard. The riverside property latterly Aberdeen Wharf was part of the land purchased by George Margetts in 1662. Edward Gray, a
Shadwell mastmaker, acquired approximately five acres
of the site on a 99-year lease in 1678, soon after he had
taken a contract from the Royal Navy worth £14,400. (fn. 42)
Initially Gray used his land for a mast- and timber-yard,
but soon began an ambitious development, wharfing the
upper section of his frontage as a dockyard, with a dry
dock and a large house. The building work was incomplete when he died, greatly in debt, in 1682. (fn. 43) His son,
also Edward, finished the project, probably in 1684. The
dry dock alone had cost about £1,000, and later in the
1680s it had to be substantially rebuilt for about £500
more. The house was a substantial one, with a belvedere
on a balustraded roof-flat (Plate 146b). The yard had
storehouses, a smiths' shop, cranes and smaller houses. (fn. 44)

The lower part of Gray's frontage was taken by John
Heydon, a shipwright, who built another dry dock in
1686. The two dry docks were recorded in 1742 as being
a single dock 198ft long, 36ft 4in. wide and 13ft 9in.
deep, and a double dock 168ft long, 40ft 9in. wide and
13ft 7in. deep. (fn. 45) It is not evident that they had been
enlarged since their construction. By 1687 Gray's dry
dock had been let to a Mr Kerbey, perhaps John Kirby;
Gray retained part of the site as a mast- and timberwharf. To build warships, Heydon made a 'lanth' or
slipway in 1693–4, by which date he held both dry docks
and the house. Heydon was succeeded at the yard by
George Fowler, tenant from 1696–7 to 1711. (fn. 46)

Batson's Yard. This dockyard and its house were briefly
in the hands of William Johnson and others in 1712–19,
before passing to William Hoskins. Robert Carter took
the yard in 1737, when the Gray family gave up the
lease, (fn. 47) and he was building ships for the Royal Navy in
the 1740s. He died in 1751 and was succeeded by his
nephews, John and Robert Batson. Their yard is prominent in the painting by John Hood, who may once have
been a foreman there. He shows it and the foreshore
congested with Baltic timber, imported for the building of
warships and East Indiamen (Plate 146b). (fn. 48) From c1770
Robert Batson (c1735–1806) had sole control of the yard.
He made some improvements, building a new smiths'
shop and, in 1778, a mould loft (fig. 142). He also rebuilt
the north-east corner of the yard as the Antigallican
public house, which survived until the 1850s. (fn. 49)

Curling, Young & Company (Limehouse Dockyard)..
In 1800 Batson's yard was transferred to Cox, Curling &
Company, shipbuilders, previously based at Duke Shore,
Limehouse, and across the river. They enlarged the dry
docks and demolished the house. (fn. 50) In 1864 the dry docks
were measured at 240ft by 48ft and 240ft by 40ft. (fn. 51) The
company was controlled in the early nineteenth century
by Robert Curling and William Young. William Curling
(c1770–1853). Jesse Curling and George Frederick Young
succeeded them and from c1820 the firm was known as
Curling, Young & Company (Plate 41c). They built East
and West Indiamen and, from the late 1830s, large
merchant steamships, all of them of timber, not iron (fig.
152). (fn. 52) The yard became known as Limehouse Dockyard,
and the management as Young, Son & Magnay from
about 1855, by which time at least one of the slips was
covered with open-sided shedding. (fn. 53) The firm continued
to build large timber ships, but this was a declining
section of the shipbuilding industry.

In 1865 Limehouse Dockyard was bought by the newly
formed London Quays & Warehouses Company, which
planned to provide wharfage and warehouses around a
new dock. Buildings were cleared in early 1866, but the
scheme was not implemented, probably because of the
current difficulties in the financial markets. (fn. 54) Sidney
Young & Company operated the lower section of the
dockyard until 1874. William Walker & Company, shipbuilders, took the upper dry dock in 1869. (fn. 55) It was
lengthened to 256ft, still largely timber-lined with timber
gates, with new shedding on its north side. As Limehouse
Dry Dock it was occupied by James Turner and others
until c1901. (fn. 56)

Aberdeen Wharf. The Aberdeen Steam Navigation
Company, previously established at a wharf in Wapping,
acquired the lower half of Limehouse Dockyard in 1874,
and by 1878 had completely redeveloped the property,
with James A. McConnochie as engineer. (fn. 57) The dry dock
was filled in and the site of the building slip to its south
excavated as a brick-lined tidal dock about 250ft by 50ft.
A four-storey block of warehouses in four divisions, with
a reversed-L plan, was built on the north side of the new
dock (Plate 42c; fig. 143). The architect was George
Judge (c1826–1902) and the builders were H. Lee &
Sons. (fn. 58) Parts of the ground storey were left open from
quay to yard for transit handling. The first floors had
brick arching on iron joists, girders and cylindrical castiron columns with ornamental heads. The upper storeys
had timber floors on similar columns. There were timbertrussed slated roofs of about 45ft span with wrought-iron
queen rods. The brick waterside elevations had a giant
order of pilasters. The capacity of the warehouses was
about 770,000 cu.ft, and the site had its own hydraulic
power supply. Towards Emmett Street the yard was
enclosed by offices and a manager's house, flanking an
entrance gate. (fn. 59)

Aberdeen Steam Wharf was chiefly used for the storage
of goods brought from Scotland, notably tinned salmon. (fn. 60)
The wharf was extended to include the Limehouse Dry
Dock site in 1901–4, by the filling of the dry dock and
the erection of three four-storey warehouse divisions
along the riverside, continuing the lines of the earlier
buildings. The engineer was J. J. Robson and the builders
were George Munday & Son. The warehouses, which
had a capacity of 490,000 cu. ft, had Columbia fire-proof
flooring (that is, flat concrete), above the ground storey,
and timber upper floors and roof trusses, all on cast-iron
columns. The faccedil;ade treatment of the earlier buildings
was continued, but to the river the parapets were decorated with polychrome voussoirs. (fn. 61) A variety of tenants
occupied parts of the wharf. In 1912 J. Spurling Ltd
took the three 1870s warehouses alongside the tidal dock
for the storage of strawboard and paper; that part of the
wharf was renamed Spurling's Lower Wharf, or Lower
Aberdeen Wharf. (fn. 62)

The wharf was badly damaged in the Blitz; the remains
of the riverside warehouses were cleared in 1948–9, and
the Emmett Street house and offices in 1956. (fn. 63) A singlestorey transit shed, approximately 144ft by 100ft, was
erected in the yard in 1950. The quay walling was
renewed in concrete to support travelling diesel-cranes
and a single-storey brick Customs Office was erected at
the north-west corner of the wharf. (fn. 64) In 1952 J. Spurling
Ltd put a reinforced-concrete upper storey on the surviving ground floor of the division near Emmett Street,
and in 1956 the firm took over the whole wharf. (fn. 65)
P. Bork & Company Ltd (later P. Bork Shipping Ltd),
timber agents, acquired the wharf in 1962, for the storage
of veneers. (fn. 66) The remaining 1870s warehouses were
demolished in 1971–2, and a single-storey transit shed
was put up on the south-east corner of the wharf, with
open lean-tos erected on the north and east sides of the
yard. (fn. 67) Aberdeen Wharf was cleared in the late 1980s for
use by contractors working on Westferry Circus and
other parts of the Canary Wharf site.

The Limehouse Entrance Lock and Westferry Circus Area

The White Lead Factory and early Timber Yards.
The section of riverfront occupied by the north-west
quadrant of Westferry Circus has a complex history. The
flood wall here was rebuilt well back from the river
following the large breach in 1660 (see below). The
building in 1678–84 of Edward Gray's dockyard, just to
the north, made the adjoining foreland particularly useful
for the laying of masts and other shipbuilding timber. It
was let initially to Gray's partner William Wood, a
mastmaker, then from 1698 to Philip Dyson, a Bermondsey shipwright. Dyson's house stood behind the flood
wall and nearby was the Star, a timber-built public
house. (fn. 68)

A section of this foreland, with a frontage of 110ft,
was developed in 1717–20 by William Rice for the
production of white lead. His buildings included a windmill, and there was a drawdock. In 1734 the site was sold
to the London (Quaker) Lead Company, which was
engaged in the mining and smelting of lead in northern
England and north Wales (fig. 144). (fn. 69) By 1740 the
company had wharfed the land and enlarged the whitelead factory. (fn. 70) Lead that was otherwise unmarketable was
brought here by ship and used to make paint, chiefly
sold in the metropolitan area. (fn. 71) The manufacture of white
lead was by the 'stack' process, which had been brought
to England from Venice, via Holland. The 'stack' was an
enclosed building about 50ft by 40ft, in which lead plates,
cast in the smelting room and then rolled, were placed
in pots of vinegar and stacked several layers high over a
bed of horse manure. The lead was left to corrode for a
few weeks, then ground into paint powder in the windmill, which was replaced by an 'engine' in 1755–6. A
brewhouse, near the river, and stables may have been
added at this date. (fn. 72)

The London Lead Company vacated the premises in
1780 and they were then taken by Richard Hanks as a
timber-wharf and yard. (fn. 73) The factory buildings were let
to Peter Mellish in 1787 as warehousing and a part of
them was occupied for a time by the East India Company
as Bengal Wharf. (fn. 74) From about 1727 the south end of
the white-lead site had been used by John Satchell, a
timber merchant. From mid-century John Tucker, of
Weymouth, had part of this frontage as a stone-wharf,
presumably for Portland stone. (fn. 75) Tucker's stone-yard and
Satchell's deal-yard each had a house, but no other
buildings of consequence. The drawdock at the south
end of this frontage was used by Obadiah Reeves, a
timber merchant, from about 1768, and after 1778 he
made the site a ship-breaking yard. (fn. 76)

All of these properties were compulsorily purchased
for the formation of the west entrance lock to the West
India Docks and the buildings were demolished, except
for Hanks's house, which was dismantled in 1828,
following flood damage. (fn. 77)

Emmett Street Wharf. The remainder of the whitelead factory site — north of the entrance lock and south
of Emmett Street — was garden until 1835, when Curling,
Young & Company took it for use as a timber-yard. (fn. 78)
Following closure of their dockyard in the 1860s the site
was used as a scrap-iron wharf by James Thomas Jago. (fn. 79) In
the 1870s Sidney Young & Company made the property a
shipwrights' and joiners' yard and put up a sawmill. (fn. 80) In
1885 the wharf was let to Thomas Smith, an ironfounder
from County Durham, who named the site the Emmett
Street Foundry and Wharf. Thomas Smith & Company
were 'manufacturers of sashweights, columns, firebars,
sanitary castings etc'. A large foundry was erected in
1889–90, and a moulding shop and store in 1898. The
company was wound up in 1916. (fn. 81)

Emmett Street Wharf was purchased c1916 by William
Mallinson & Company, timber merchants, who, as a
wartime exigence, used it to store aeroplane timber. An
open-sided shed of 18 bays, 267ft long, was erected in
1917–18 to cover the timber. It had a Belfast-truss roof
on reinforced-concrete columns and an electric travelling
crane on a gantry which projected over the river. Four
brick timber-drying kilns were built at the east end of
the wharf. The builders were Leslie & Company of
Kensington Square. (fn. 82) From the early 1960s to 1984–5
the wharf was occupied by Jack Summers Ltd, timber
merchants and kiln dryers. (fn. 83) The site was subsequently
cleared and is now part of Westferry Circus.

Bridge Wharf. The West India Docks' Limehouse
entrance lock became unusable upon the filling of the
Limehouse Basin in 1927–8. In 1929 the lock and its
pierheads were let to J. J. Prior Ltd, sand and ballast
wharfingers and transporters, who filled the lock and
wharfed the frontage with timber in 1930. No. 8 Bridge
Road, a former gatekeeper's house built by the West
India Dock Company in 1815, was also leased and the
site was named Bridge Wharf after the redundant lock
crossing. Amongst the processing structures erected in
the 1930s were a tar plant-house of three steel silos,
hoppers, conveyors and cranes. (fn. 84) Bridge Wharf was transferred to Merediths Ltd, timber importers, in 1962, and
the wharfing was replaced with concrete-capped steel
sheet-piling. (fn. 85) The site has been absorbed into Westferry
Circus.

The Limehouse Slipway. The former ship-breaking
yard south of the entrance lock was used by the West
India Dock Company as its main site for the delivery of
bricks during the building of the docks, when it contained
a mortar steam engine and lime-kilns (see page 326). In
1813, when the dock company's primary building works
were complete, the frontage was embanked in brick,
leaving a drawdock or slipway for the repair of dockcompany lock gates and boats. The surrounding area was
used as a carpenters' yard, occupied by Thomas
Johnson & Son, who rebuilt the drawdock with landing
stairs in 1822–3. (fn. 86) Boatbuilders' and smiths' shops were
erected later in the nineteenth century. The site and its
buildings were leased to Charrington, Gardner, Locket &
Company in 1925, for their barge repair business. (fn. 87) The
slipway was reconstructed in concrete in 1938–9 to take
two barges under one roof, but the buildings were
destroyed and the slipway damaged in the bombing raids
of 1940–1. (fn. 88) The PLA took the site in 1962 for the repair
of its own barges and John Mowlem & Company then
raised a shed roof and gantries over the slipway. (fn. 89) The
PLA sold the Limehouse Slipway c1972 and it was
subsequently used by Robbins (Marine) as a barge- and
yacht-repair yard. The site was taken for the building of
Westferry Circus. (fn. 90)

The Union Wharf Site

The Breach, Poplar Gut and the Gut House. A large
section of the medieval river wall below Limehouse was
dramatically breached on 20 March 1660 and much of
the Isle of Dogs was flooded. It was the worst breach
since that of 1449, although smaller ones had occurred
from time to time, and they may have become more
frequent during the seventeenth century. (fn. 91) The Poplar
Commissioners of Sewers repaired the damage and rebuilt
other sections of defective wall, at a cost of more than
£16,000, raised by the imposition on landowners of very
high rates of about £24 per acre. The work was done by
William Ham, Orton Brooker and George Salmon, and
presumably consisted of timber piling and planking, with
chalk and clay fill and buttressing. The new section of
wall was set well back from the river behind unprotected
foreland that came to be known simply as the Breach. (fn. 92)
Most of the floodwater was drained, but approximately
five acres of water remained, stretching eastwards from
the Breach. This came to be called the Great Gut, or
Poplar Gut. (fn. 93)

In the early 1730s William Atterbury, a butcher, built
a house at the south-west corner of the Gut; this became
a public house which by 1750 was known as the Gut
House, although it may originally have been the Shipwright's Arms (Plate 41b). (fn. 94) In the 1790s a row of eight
houses and William and John Godsell's ropeyard were
built south of the Gut House, but these were removed
within a decade for the building of the City Canal. (fn. 95) The
Gut House was displaced by the West India Export Dock
in 1806 and the establishment moved to new premises
north of the City Canal west entrance lock, but these
had to be demolished in 1811 for a realignment of Bridge
Road. The proprietor, James Oughton, then moved
slightly further south to build the City Arms public
house (see page 409). (fn. 96)

The Breach Dockyard, 1707–1818. The large foreland
formed by the breach of 1660 was used for laying up
timber until 1707. In that year John Winter, a London
shipwright, who had taken important Navy contracts,
was given a 99-year lease of about four acres of the
Breach south of Philip Dyson's foreland, a site more than
500ft deep, with a river frontage of c350ft. (fn. 97) Winter
quickly began work on a major building project, reclaiming and wharfing the land as a shipbuilding yard. It was
wartime and ships were in demand, but Winter overreached himself, found that he could not meet his debts —
which were £7,360 by 1710 — and his mortgagee, Peter
Pouree, foreclosed. Building work continued under
Pouree until 1712, and John DeGreaves occupied the
yard until 1715, when Pouree was himself declared
bankrupt. (fn. 98)

Winter's dockyard was built with two dry docks, presumably timber lined. One was described as the 'long Dock'
and was one of the longest private dry docks on the Thames
(Plate 41a; fig. 145). In 1742 it was measured as a double
dock 406ft long, 40ft 8in. wide and 14ft 2in. deep, although
by 1864 it was only 320ft long and 37ft wide. The single
dock was 140ft long, 38½ft wide and 12½ft deep. At the
lower end of the yard there were one or two building slips
and towards its rear were warehouses, a mould loft and,
most prominently, a substantial three-storey house with
full-height forward-projecting pavilion wings. There were
also brick pitch-furnaces, smiths' and carpenters' shops,
sawpits and a crane. (fn. 99)

In 1715 William Hoare, previously employed in the
yard, became its manager. Hoare acquired the remainder
of Winter's lease in 1717 and the 500-year head-lease in
1719. He died in 1740 and his son let the yard to Thomas
Snellgrove, who built for the Royal Navy, as he or his
family had previously done in Wapping and Deptford. (fn. 100)
In 1753 the yard was sold to John Smart (c1702–77), a
malt distiller. (fn. 101) Smart had the yard painted by Francis
Swaine, but he did not use it for shipbuilding (Plate
41a). By 1754 he had built a distillery, served by the two
windmills which he erected near the river between 1754
and 1759 (Plate 146b). He also put up a cooperage,
stables, pigsties and a bacon house. (fn. 102) In 1774 Smart
leased the property to James Menetone, a Wapping and
Ratcliff shipwright, and cleared his buildings so that
the site could again be used as a dockyard. Menetone
reconstructed the smaller dry dock, probably enlarging
it, and spent at least £2,000 on the premises before his
death in 1786. (fn. 103) The yard was then taken by his son-inlaw Almon Hill (c1741–1808), in partnership with Robert
Mellish, and they built warships and East Indiamen.
From 1808 to 1818 the business was carried on by Hill's
sons, Almon and James. (fn. 104)

The yard had changed little since the early eighteenth
century. A storehouse had been built on the north side
of the upper dry dock, probably by Menetone in the
1770s, allowing the old warehouses to become smiths'
shops and stables. A foreman's house and, adjoining it,
a large two-storey rigging house had also been built to
the south-west of the main house. (fn. 105)

The Breach south of the dockyard was a mast- and
timber-laying dock throughout the eighteenth century
(Plate 41a). (fn. 106) It was partially reclaimed for the west
end of the City Canal in 1802–5. The section between
the canal and the dockyard was acquired by the West
India Dock Company in 1805 for a projected second
Limehouse entrance, but this was not built, and it
remained a mast pond until 1829. There was also a
timber-yard adjoining the north pierhead of the canal
entrance lock. The Breach south of the lock was wharfed
and developed as the Canal Iron Works in 1807–9 (see
page 410). (fn. 107)

The Union Docks (Fletcher, Son & Fearnall), 1818–1925. The West India Dock Company bought the freehold
of the Hills' dockyard in 1818, partly with a view to
possible enlargement of its Limehouse Basin, partly to
control development near the docks. In 1808–15 a road
had been built along the line of the river wall of 1660,
skirting the east side of the dockyard, and the company
rerouted this away from its Export Dock after its acquisition of the yard. The mansion and mould loft were
demolished and an extensive garden with an ornamental
pond was also destroyed. (fn. 108) In 1818 the lease of the yard,
with an additional plot as far north as the drawdock that
became the Limehouse Slipway, was transferred to the
partnership of Henry and Joseph Fletcher and William
Fearnall, trading as Fletcher, Son & Fearnall. (fn. 109) The
Fletcher family had been shipbuilders at Shadwell since
the early eighteenth century. (fn. 110) A new house built at the
north end of the dockyard c1820 was a large villa with
multiple bow windows, perhaps comparable to Bridge
House in appearance. John Rennie may have been its
architect, through the connection with the dock company.
He did prepare plans for rebuilding the upper dry dock
in 1821, but when it was remade in 1824–5, it was
probably not to Rennie's specifications. As measured in
1864 it was 276ft long and 48ft wide. (fn. 111) Opposition to
the use of dock-company land for shipbuilding led the
company to agree in 1822 to give up the freehold, but it
was not actually sold to Joseph Fletcher until 1827. (fn. 112)

Fletcher. Son & Fearnall were early steamship builders,
taking contracts from British and foreign governments,
the East India Company and steam-navigation companies.
They also repaired shipping using the West India Docks.
Thomas Joseph Ditchburn (1801–70) was superintendent
of the yard from 1822 to 1837 and established its reputation for steamship building. He was an innovative
designer, specializing in long, fast river- and excursionvessels, some of the ships' engines for which were made
nearby at the Canal Iron Works. (fn. 113) Joseph Fletcher
extended the dockyard to the south in 1829–31, leasing
the former mast pond and timber-yard from the dock
company. (fn. 114) He solved the problem of creating the foundations for a dry dock on this unembanked frontage by
sinking the hull of the Canton, an old East Indiaman, in
the former mast pond, fastening it down with piles,
fitting it with timber gates, and surrounding it with made
ground to form an oak-lined dry dock, 220ft by 56ft.
Completed by 1833, the dock was intended for steamboats, and so there were recesses in the side walls to give
room around the paddles (fig. 146). Associated work
included new wharf-walling, a building slip south of the
dry dock, sheds, sawpits, a mastmakers' shop and a house.
The Union Docks thus came to occupy virtually all of
the Breach, with the entire frontage between the two
Limehouse entrance locks, becoming one of the largest
private yards on the Thames (Plate 147b). (fn. 115)

From the death of Joseph Fletcher in 1852, the firm
was controlled by John Thompson Fletcher and Thomas
Keddey Fletcher, with the latter carrying on alone from
1869 until his death in 1889. It did not make the transition
from timber to iron or steel shipbuilding and so its
business became predominantly repair work. In this
period a sawmill with an engine house was added
between the upper and middle docks, and shops for sail-,
mast- and blockmakers, riggers, coopers, blacksmiths
and fitters were erected to the south. (fn. 116) The lower or
steamboat dry dock was slightly lengthened c1873–4. (fn. 117)
The upper dry dock was enlarged in 1879–80, with
Edward Charles Homer as engineer, being lengthened by
approximately 50ft, to 334ft, and made 46½ft wide at its
entrance, and 17ft 4in. deep at high water. It was given
brick walling and a concrete bottom, but retained its
timber gates behind new jetties. The middle dry dock
was also enlarged in 1880, to 352ft long and 44ft 3in.
wide at its entrance, and deepened by 1ft 6in. to 15ft
10in. Its timber entrance was reconstructed in brick and
concrete and given an iron caisson instead of gates. The
sawmill between the upper and middle docks was replaced
in 1880–1 with a two-storey engineers' shop, eight bays
long, with a surrounding veranda, for general marineengineering and boiler-making work. (fn. 118)

From 1889 the proprietors of the Union Docks were
Reginald George Fletcher and Henry Marshall Fletcher,
the former acting alone from 1896, when Fletcher, Son &
Fearnall became a limited-liability company. In 1891–2
the upper slipway was filled and embanked, and a gridiron
250ft by 40ft was laid along the foreshore. The gridiron
was later shortened to 130ft and moved to a position
below the lower dry dock. (fn. 119) The lower dry dock was
entirely rebuilt in 1897–9 with W. R. Kinipple, a drydock specialist, as consulting engineer, William Jaffrey as
resident engineer, and Kirk & Randall as contractors.
The hull of the Canton was removed and land was
reclaimed from the river to make a dry dock 440ft long,
79ft wide (60ft at its entrance) and 24ft deep. It was built
entirely of concrete, and had iron gates with air chambers
for buoyancy and a jetty, 46ft long, below its entrance.
There was centrifugal pumping-machinery, supplied by
Gwynne & Company, in an engine house north of the
dock, driven by 340hp gas engines made by Crossley
Brothers Ltd of Manchester, and connected to serve the
other dry docks. Travelling cranes were installed beside
all three docks. (fn. 120)

Fletcher, Son & Fearnall's business increasingly
became general engineering work, though the 1914–18
war brought a revival in ship repair and even some
shipbuilding. This allowed some improvements at the
yard in 1916–18. A large office building was erected south
of the Bridge Road entrance, with Andrews & Peascod
as architects, and a row of three houses for dockyard
employees, Fletcher's Villas, was built near the south end
of the yard by Hammond & Miles, to the designs of
Frederick G. Faunch. Business declined, however, and
Fletcher, Son & Fearnall Ltd was wound up in 1925. (fn. 121)
For a decade the Union Docks site remained vacant.
The buildings were cleared, except the new offices and
Fletcher's Villas (which stood until they were demolished
in 1988), and the upper and middle dry docks were filled
during the mid-1930s.

Locke's Wharf and Union Dock Wharf. In 1871 the
northernmost section of the Union Docks — that is, the
house of c1820 with land up to the river that had been
its garden — was leased to Locke, Lancaster & Company,
an established firm of lead merchants that had recently
become manufacturers. By 1872 F. W. May of Camberwell had built a lead-refining works on the site, which
became known as Locke's Wharf, and the house became
offices. The works comprised a single-storey factory with
two blast-furnaces, a foundry, workshops, warehouses
and a tall chimney, all used to extract lead and silver
from lead ores. The buildings were extended in the 1880s
and a third blast-furnace, reputedly the first mechanically
charged lead blast-furnace in the country, was added in
1892. (fn. 122) Locke, Lancaster & Company retained the wharf
until c1930. (fn. 123)

The southernmost section of the Union Docks, the
small wharf that had been a timber-yard until 1829, was
let c1880 to Lamb, Beal & Son, chain-cable makers and
anchor-smiths. They named the site Union Dock Wharf
and put up several sheds and workshops, removed others,
and retained the wharf until the early 1920s. (fn. 124)

Cargo Fleet Wharf, the Union Dry Dock and Union
Wharf. The Union Docks site was divided in 1934–5.
The middle section was taken by the Cargo Fleet Iron
Company (a subsidiary of the South Durham Steel &
Ironworks Company) and became Cargo Fleet Wharf.
This steel company, which had been at Pyrimont Wharf
since 1926, had been formed at Middlesbrough by Henry
Frederick Swan in 1880. By 1936 a large fabricating
shop, clad in steel and corrugated-iron, had been erected
by John Mowlem & Company, with a huge travellingcrane gantry adjoining. The wharf was used as a stockyard and distribution depot for steel girders shipped from
Middlesbrough. A two-storey office building and a brick
pattern shop and store were erected on the east side of
the wharf in 1948–50. (fn. 125) The northern section of the
dockyard had become Union Wharf, occupied from 1934
by J. Spurling Ltd as an open timber-and stone-yard,
with two sheds erected in 1935 to house iron and steel.
From c1938 Union Wharf was occupied by Goodman
Price Ltd, housebreakers. (fn. 126) In the late 1940s Cargo Fleet
Wharf spread north on to the Union Wharf site. The
wharf's river wall was reconstructed in steel sheet-piling
in 1957–8. (fn. 127)

The lower dry dock and the gridiron, slip and wharf
to its south were unused from 1925 until c1940, when
the Admiralty requisitioned the dry dock for wartime
work. It was managed as the Union Dry Dock by
R. & H. Green & Silley Weir until 1951, when it was
derequisitioned. (fn. 128) In 1955–6 the Thames Dry Dock &
Engineering Company, which was part of the General
Lighterage (Holdings) Group, converted the dry dock
into a double slipway for the building and repair of small
tugs and barges, designed and built by G. Tate & Son.
The slipway was of reinforced-concrete, with its deck
raised on columns and beams. A twin-span steel-framed
shed was erected over its inner 200ft to provide a
plating shop. In 1958 the lower section of wharf was
reconstructed in steel sheet-piling, but the slipway was
used only until c1965 (fn. 129)

In the late 1960s Cargo Fleet Wharf and the Union
Dry Dock were taken as a site for the processing of sand
and gravel by various concrete and dredging companies.
The fabricating shop and gantry were cleared, and the
slipway was filled. Wharfing was renewed and hoppers,
conveyors, cranes and gantries were erected. The northern section was taken for the building of Westferry
Circus. The remainder was cleared in 1991. (fn. 130)